Raiders employee Randy Hanson on Tuesday filed a civil lawsuit against Raiders head coach Tom Cable for assault, battery and intentional infliction of emotional distress, reviving assault allegations first made during training camp.

Hanson also is suing the Raiders for not punishing Cable after the alleged assault during training camp in August, all while demoting Hanson from assistant coach to the personnel department.

Napa police investigated Cable but the district attorney's office declined to press charges, citing an initial lack of cooperation from Hanson, followed by inconsistencies in his story.

Hanson's attorney filed the lawsuit Tuesday in Alameda County Superior Court, seeking exemplary and punitive damages and a jury trial.

The Raiders did not comment publicly on the lawsuit.

In the filing, Hanson's attorney rehashes the accusations made by Hanson in the months after the training-camp altercation.

He accuses Cable of attacking him from behind, breaking his jaw and several teeth against a table, jumping on top of him, grabbing his neck and threatening to kill him.

New details emerged concerning Hanson's return to work in October. According to the lawsuit, Hanson was told he no longer could park in the rear of the team facility with players and coaches, could not use the back entrance as they did and could not attend Raiders home games.

He also was told to stay on the "administrative" side of the team facility and not to enter the "football" side.

Hanson said he was told those conditions would last for only four weeks. He says that Raiders owner Al Davis informed him Jan. 28 that, though under contract until January 2011, he would not be allowed to return to his former assistant-coaching position.

The lawsuit thus claims "the Raiders' ratified Cable's conduct by failing to discipline Cable and instead effectively terminating Hanson from his position as assistant coach and relegating him to a position in which he was not allowed to perform the duties required of him in his contract."

As for Cable, he remains under contract through the 2011 season, but the Raiders have yet to say they have decided to keep him as head coach for next season.

Cable presumably will attend this week's NFL scouting combine in Indianapolis, though a Raiders spokesman did not return a phone message to confirm Cable's attendance.

Since January, team officials repeatedly have described Cable's status as part of an "ongoing evaluation," and that the team had yet to come to a "resolution."

In November, the Raiders and the NFL office announced they would investigate Cable for past accusations of domestic violence made by two women against him. No results were announced.